Antibiotic Concentrations After Massive Transfusion (ACME) Study: A Review of the Literature on Antibiotic Dosing During Transfusion and Study Protocol.

Q3 Medicine
Rocio J Huaman, Fabiola Mancha, Erin L Anderson, Michael D April, Vikhyat S Bebarta, Marisol S Castaneto, Uwe Christians, Daniel N Darlington, David J Douin, Keith R Glenn, Pucheng Ke, Brian J Kirkwood, Brit J Long, Joseph K Maddry, Jessica Mendez, Allyson A Mireles, Anne C Ritter, Kristine E Schauer, Annabel L Schumaker, Matthew D Smith, Franklin L Wright, Adit A Ginde, Julie A Rizzo, Steven G Schauer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Trauma in combat or civilian settings often involves severe hemorrhage and open wounds, which carry a high risk of infection. Current clinical guidelines recommend prophylactic antibiotics for high-risk wounds. Adequate plasma antibiotic concentrations are necessary for tissue penetration, particularly into injured tissue. Blood loss from traumatic hemorrhage may impact plasma antibiotic concentrations. However, the association between blood loss, subsequent blood product transfusion, and antibiotic concentrations remains unclear. We hypothesize that antibiotic concentrations decrease in proportion to the volume of blood transfused, potentially leading to insufficient antibiotic concentrations, placing the injured patient at increased infection risk.

Methods: We are conducting a prospective, multicenter study that will enroll trauma patients from two large trauma centers: Brooke Army Medical Center and the University of Colorado Hospital. We will enroll participants receiving antibiotics for wound prophylaxis and three or more units of blood products. We will also enroll a control arm comprised of participants receiving the same antibiotics who receive two or fewer units of blood. Blood samples will be collected from participants at predetermined time intervals after antibiotic infusion to assess antibiotic concentrations. Our statistical analysis will focus on the relationship between the volume of blood products administered and antibiotic concentrations. Results will inform the development of antibiotic dosing models for clinicians that adjust for the effects of blood transfusion.

Conclusion: The goal of this study is to fill a significant gap in trauma care that could potentially lead to optimized antibiotic dosing and improved outcomes for trauma patients.

大量输血后抗生素浓度(ACME)研究:关于输血期间抗生素剂量和研究方案的文献综述。
背景:战斗或平民环境中的创伤通常涉及严重出血和开放性伤口,这具有很高的感染风险。目前的临床指南建议对高危伤口使用预防性抗生素。足够的血浆抗生素浓度对于组织渗透,特别是对受伤组织的渗透是必要的。外伤性出血导致的失血可能影响血浆抗生素浓度。然而,失血、随后的血液制品输血和抗生素浓度之间的关系尚不清楚。我们假设抗生素浓度与输血量成比例降低,可能导致抗生素浓度不足,使受伤患者面临更高的感染风险。方法:我们正在进行一项前瞻性的多中心研究,将招募来自两个大型创伤中心的创伤患者:布鲁克陆军医学中心和科罗拉多大学医院。我们将招募接受抗生素用于伤口预防和三个或更多单位血液制品的参与者。我们还将招募一个对照组,由接受相同抗生素的参与者组成,他们接受两个或更少单位的血液。在抗生素输注后,将在预定的时间间隔收集参与者的血液样本,以评估抗生素浓度。我们的统计分析将集中在供血量和抗生素浓度之间的关系。结果将为临床医生调整输血影响的抗生素剂量模型的发展提供信息。结论:本研究的目的是填补创伤护理的重大空白,可能导致优化抗生素剂量和改善创伤患者的预后。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
91
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